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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsIs Britain Ready for the Return of the Big Cat?
http://magazine.good.is/articles/rewilding-britain-lynx-beaver?utm_source=thedailygood&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dailygood=s750x1300
Back in 2012, residents at a caravan park in the British countryside called the local authorities with an urgent concern: a lion was prowling through the woods and fields nearby. The police deployed two helicopters with infrared sensors and swept the woods, while handlers on the ground from a local zoo weeded through the forest, armed with tranquilizers. But the hunt fizzled out. What would later be known as the Essex Lion turned out to be a local womans pet, a big Maine Coon affectionately known as Teddy Bear.
Teddy Bears story taps into the oversized role big cats play in the British imagination. Back when the U.K. was more like Game of Thrones than Downton Abbey, the island was full of predators: wolves, bears, and yes, big cats. A seventh-century Welsh poem contains one of the last surviving historical British references to the lynx, a pointy-eared feline up to three-and-a-half feet long that was hunted to extinction on the island over 1300 years ago. Bears and wolves have gone the same route. These predators were instrumental in maintaining the natural world around them. They preyed on smaller mammals, animals that can throw off entire ecosystems when their populations are left unchecked. But in a modern twist, marrying conservation and inspiration, returning some of these large predators to Britain may become a reality within a decade. Riding on a rewilding wave that has been successful in places across the U.K. and Europe, conservation groups are advocating reintroducing the Eurasian lynx back to Britain.
I see rewilding as the mass restoration of ecosystems, of which the reintroduction of keystone species is a critically important component, says George Monbiot, author of Feral: Searching for Enchantment on the Frontiers of Rewilding. For me, rewilding is a process without an end point. Were not trying to create a new fixed state of nature; were trying to allow natural processes to resume. In many ways, the process is the outcome. We want to allow nature to continue to undergo dynamic cycles of change and succession, rather than trying to freeze it in any one point, as all too often conservation attempts do.
Rewilding is having something of a historical moment throughout Europe. Many argue that its urgently needed in the British Isles, which have suffered from years of intrusive human depletion on ecosystems where wetlands and forests were once abundant. Scotlands Trees for Life has planted more than a million trees across 1000 square miles of wilderness, reforesting a denuded landscape in the rugged and sparsely populated Scottish Highlands. After humans hunted beavers to extinction 400 years ago in Britain, a reintroduction in Scotland ended this May after a five-year trial and a final report to the Scottish Government. The government will decide later this year whether to expand reintroduction, halt it, or continue to study the beavers. Like lynx, beavers are keystone species that provide critically important ecological services. In the trial period, the beavers significantly contributed to the health of local woodlands along loch shores. The level of water in the lochs also rose due to the beaver dams, increasing the health and diversity of aquatic species. There have even been unofficial or accidental reintroductions that show the viability of wild beavers. All across the British Isles, there is work to reinstate natural processes, which can mean projects like these, restoring wetlands, or even renaturalizing the course of rivers.
Teddy Bears story taps into the oversized role big cats play in the British imagination. Back when the U.K. was more like Game of Thrones than Downton Abbey, the island was full of predators: wolves, bears, and yes, big cats. A seventh-century Welsh poem contains one of the last surviving historical British references to the lynx, a pointy-eared feline up to three-and-a-half feet long that was hunted to extinction on the island over 1300 years ago. Bears and wolves have gone the same route. These predators were instrumental in maintaining the natural world around them. They preyed on smaller mammals, animals that can throw off entire ecosystems when their populations are left unchecked. But in a modern twist, marrying conservation and inspiration, returning some of these large predators to Britain may become a reality within a decade. Riding on a rewilding wave that has been successful in places across the U.K. and Europe, conservation groups are advocating reintroducing the Eurasian lynx back to Britain.
I see rewilding as the mass restoration of ecosystems, of which the reintroduction of keystone species is a critically important component, says George Monbiot, author of Feral: Searching for Enchantment on the Frontiers of Rewilding. For me, rewilding is a process without an end point. Were not trying to create a new fixed state of nature; were trying to allow natural processes to resume. In many ways, the process is the outcome. We want to allow nature to continue to undergo dynamic cycles of change and succession, rather than trying to freeze it in any one point, as all too often conservation attempts do.
Rewilding is having something of a historical moment throughout Europe. Many argue that its urgently needed in the British Isles, which have suffered from years of intrusive human depletion on ecosystems where wetlands and forests were once abundant. Scotlands Trees for Life has planted more than a million trees across 1000 square miles of wilderness, reforesting a denuded landscape in the rugged and sparsely populated Scottish Highlands. After humans hunted beavers to extinction 400 years ago in Britain, a reintroduction in Scotland ended this May after a five-year trial and a final report to the Scottish Government. The government will decide later this year whether to expand reintroduction, halt it, or continue to study the beavers. Like lynx, beavers are keystone species that provide critically important ecological services. In the trial period, the beavers significantly contributed to the health of local woodlands along loch shores. The level of water in the lochs also rose due to the beaver dams, increasing the health and diversity of aquatic species. There have even been unofficial or accidental reintroductions that show the viability of wild beavers. All across the British Isles, there is work to reinstate natural processes, which can mean projects like these, restoring wetlands, or even renaturalizing the course of rivers.
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Is Britain Ready for the Return of the Big Cat? (Original Post)
geardaddy
May 2015
OP
It's not a small cat either, but yeah it's not as big as a lion, tiger, or cougar
geardaddy
May 2015
#4
KamaAina
(78,249 posts)1. So are they going to bring the snakes back to Ireland?
hlthe2b
(101,730 posts)3. A lynx is clearly a "wild" cat, but a "BIG" cat? I don't think so...
Did Britain never have mountain lions/cougars?
geardaddy
(24,924 posts)4. It's not a small cat either, but yeah it's not as big as a lion, tiger, or cougar
I think puma/mountain lions/cougars are all indigenous to the Western Hemisphere.
The last "big" big cat was the cave lion, extinct c. 10,000 B.C.E.
MisterP
(23,730 posts)5. some more on the weird sightings